I am in an exploration mood today and as I also see the contingency argument very useful and compelling, I want to move into this realm. Are contingencies defined by a "reason" or can they just be causal (one therefore the next)? What is "necessary?" Also the Argument of Contingency implies that something is necessary and this is not initially posited as part of the argument. Is this an axiom that is assumed to be true with regards to contingency? It seems so from the link above but I want to make sure I am correct before proceeding.
I'm still trying to find good answers to a couple of these questions, Cacky, but I wanted to at least address this one. "Necessary," in this context, means that which could never have failed to exist. And by my understanding, since every material thing humanity has ever encountered in this universe is quite clearly contingent, any "necessary" thing must also be somewhat supernatural. Put another way, if your worldview involves any "necessary" thing (and I don't see how a coherent view can avoid at least one such object), then you can't be a strict materialist.
Deists can not define God's will in a string of occurrence of events unless all or none of them are "God's will." And if that is the case, the sum total of all events sooner or later disproves the concept of "God's will" being a possibility of an engaged supernatural being active in our world. So there then lies the deists fatal flaw.
You lost me here Bogs. Are you asserting that the Argument from Contingency either leads us to Determinism or Deism? I don't see how that's the case. Those are two opposite extremes regarding God's involvement in human history, and most of Christianity (not to mention other monotheistic faiths) fall somewhere in between.
Surely this is a typo, do you mean people?
Not a typo. CS Lewis frequently refers to humans as "gods" with a small "g". It's an effective way to convey the Christian understanding that we are far more than a collection of molecules/ the most evolved apes.
My issue with free will, pointed out earlier, is that 1) the "word of god" was spread through the most anti-Jesus way possible: the sword
First, this is a gross exaggeration. If you account for every recorded war in human history, those waged for primarily religious reasons are a very small %. Filter out those waged by Muslims, and you're down in the 1-2% range. Second, this brings us back to the purpose of creation. This world exists in a fallen state because such is necessary for humans to have a meaningful choice between God and themselves. Thus the imperfections and inefficiencies in the spread of his Word-- because humanity, in its brokenness, must be part of its spread. Had God chosen a more direct and "efficient" way of revealing himself to the world, it would have ruined the entire experiment.
--God of course knew that would happen so why go about it that way? It doesn't seem special at all when you compare it to religions around the world.
Really? An obscure sect of Judaism arose in a backwater of the Roman empire circa 33 AD, and, within a relatively brief period of time, became the dominant religion in the Western world. After which its ideological off-spring would go on to conquer most of the planet. I'm not arguing that any of this makes the truth of Christianity self-evident, but you can't really claim it's just like every other religion.
And 2) the multiple continents full of people who never has this choice of "Him or themselves." What is the Church's position on people who never hear the word? There are still people in the Amazon and on islands out there who never hear about Christianity. Hell I'm sure there are children in India/China/North Korea and parts of Africa who die before ever once hearing about Jesus. What's up with their souls?
wizards already touched upon this, but the Christian view is that Jesus saved all of mankind, whether they've ever heard his name or not. At every moment, each individual makes a choice between himself (sin, selfishness, etc.) and God (love, community, etc.). God doesn't "send" anyone to hell; each individual chooses where to go based on how they lived their lives (and many theologians have suggested that Heaven would be intolerable for anyone who hadn't prepared themselves for it). Living a good and moral life is probably harder for those who aren't Christian, but then again, sin is subjective, and everyone is judged according to their own understanding.
I think this is crazy talk.
I don't expect to convince you on this subject, because we all suffer from a strong bias in favor of the present. But that's the Christian view. Believing otherwise-- that humanity can bring about paradise on earth through its own efforts-- is dangerously utopian. Much of the worst genocide in the 20th century was carried out by regimes founded on similar beliefs.
If you limit the metrics for human "progress" to health and wealth, then yes, it appears we're doing much better today than we ever have before. But that's a very narrow view of what human flourishing entails; when one looks at a broader spectrum of wellness indicators, I don't think it's unreasonable to posit that we aren't living much better today than our ancestors did for much of history.
I've always thought miracles are hypocritical. On one hand it's all about free will and measuring blind faith, on the other the guy upstairs is sprinkling miracles where he sees fit.
Again, this all comes back to "free will" and the purpose of creation. His goal is for us to voluntarily choose Him over ourselves. Once an individual starts doing that, God can take a more active role in his life without invalidating his choice. But He doesn't simply go around doing stuff to people arbitrarily.
Miracles to me are medicine and capitalism. Every person, government, and religion on the planet thought that universal poverty was inescapable. St. Thomas, if I remember correctly wrote extensively on the topic. They were all wrong, we've lifted more poor people out of poverty that the Church ever could--even as the world's largest charitable organization. That is more impressive than the myriad miracles, because I can prove quality of life is improving. And yet I think your second paragraph says that that's a bad thing! I don't get that.
I think you're overstating your case here. The vast majority of those that have been lifted out of poverty are living in China. A lot of that has to do with the system of global capitalism that America has built and maintained; and I trust you're well aware that there are
lots of losers when it comes to global capitalism. And it goes far beyond those who have lost their jobs-- communities destroyed, social cohesion eroded, etc. The cultural effects are far-reaching and still poorly understood.
So I think the Church is very reasonable to look at the costs and benefits of global capitalism and call it (at best) a wash. But, as I mentioned above, one has to consider a broader spectrum of "wellness" variables. If you come to this question with utilitarian assumptions of what the good life entails, then the conclusion you've drawn is pretty much unavoidable.
Here is a question for those that utilize the "God of the Gap" philosophy.
If there is an unknown "mover" of time and space (as Newton's Law would say) that would have to be the beginning.... then who/what created him/her? I mean, if God's existence can be based on the laws of physics, doesn't those same laws insinuate that something must have created God?
I know the discussion has already moved on from this, but I wanted to address this quickly. My understanding of the "God of the Gaps" argument is this: "Science still can't explain X,Y,Z; therefore, God!" Its weakness is obvious, because empiricism is constantly shrinking the sphere of things that can't be explained.
But the Argument from Contingency isn't based on the laws of physics,
per se. It's a philosophical argument that quickly brings us to the point of infinite regression, which empiricism cannot accept on its own terms (and is therefore inadequate explain it). How one chooses to address the infinite regression invariably involves an assertion of faith; you can either assert that something supernatural caused the infinite regression (and the fact that the laws of physics apparently don't apply to that something is hardly problematic since it exists
outside the set in which those laws have force), or you can simply assert the necessity of the Universe itself, or abstract mathematical objects, etc. (which is basically theism by a different name). But it's not "proving" God through the laws of physics.